CHAPTER XIV.
MATERNAL SORROW. [Instructor’s
note: Scene opens at the
[14.1]
Slow and heavy
passed the time while the carriage was conveying Mr. Eldridge home; and yet when
he came in sight of the house, he wished a longer reprieve from the dreadful
task of informing Mr. and Mrs. Temple of their daughter's elopement.
[14.2]
It is easy to judge the anxiety of these affectionate
parents, when they found the return of their father delayed so much beyond the
expected time. They were now met in the dining parlour, and several of the young
people who had been invited were already arrived. Each different part of the
company was employed in the same manner, looking out at the windows which faced
the road. At length the long-expected chaise appeared. Mrs. Temple ran out to
receive and welcome her darling: her young companions flocked round the door,
each one eager to give her joy on the return of her birth-day.
The door of the
chaise was opened:
[14.3]
Mr. Eldridge could
not answer: he took hold of his daughter's hand and led her into the house; and
sinking on the first chair he came to, burst into tears, and sobbed aloud.
[14.4]
"She is dead," cried Mrs. Temple. "Oh my dear
[14.5]
Mr. Temple, who had stood speechless with surprise and
fear, now ventured to enquire if indeed his
[14.6]
It would be vain to attempt describing what Mr.
[14.7]
Should any one,
presuming on his own
philosophic temper, look with an eye of contempt on the man
who could indulge a woman's weakness, let him remember that man was a father,
and he will then pity the misery which wrung those drops from a noble, generous
heart.
[Early sentimental
romances cultivate the image of a “man of sensibility”--i.e., emotional sensitivity
& expressiveness]
[14.8]
Mrs. Temple beginning to be a little more composed, but
still imagining her child was dead, her husband, gently taking her hand,
cried—"You are mistaken, my love.
[14.9]
"Then she is very
ill, else why did she not come? But I will go to her: the chaise is still at the
door: let me go instantly to the dear girl. If I was ill, she would fly to
attend me, to alleviate my sufferings, and cheer me with her love."
[14.10]
"Be calm, my
dearest Lucy, and I will tell you all," said Mr. Temple. "You must not go,
indeed you must not; it will be of no use."
[14.11]
"
[14.12]
"Lucy," replied Mr. Temple,
"imagine your
daughter alive, and in no danger of death: what misfortune would you then
dread?"
[14.13]
"There is one
misfortune which is worse than death.
But I know my child too well to suspect—"
[14.14]
"Be not too
confident, Lucy."
[14.15]
"Oh heavens!" said
she, "what horrid images do you start: is it possible she should forget—"
[14.16]
"She has forgot us
all, my love; she has preferred the love of a stranger to the affectionate
protection of her friends.”
[14.17]
"Not eloped?" cried
she eagerly.
[14.18]
Mr. Temple was
silent.
[14.19]
"You cannot contradict it," said she. "I see my fate in
those tearful eyes. Oh
[14.20]
The last words
faltered on her tongue, and she fell fainting into the arms of her husband, who
had involuntarily dropped on his knees beside her.
[14.21]
A mother's anguish, when disappointed in her tenderest
hopes, none but a mother can conceive. Yet,
my dear young readers, I would have you
read this scene with attention, and reflect that you may yourselves one day be
mothers. Oh my friends, as you value your eternal happiness, wound not, by
thoughtless ingratitude, the peace of the mother who bore you: remember the
tenderness, the care, the unremitting anxiety with which she has attended to all
your wants and wishes from earliest infancy to the present day; behold the mild
ray of affectionate applause that beams from her eye on the performance of your
duty: listen to her reproofs with silent attention; they proceed from a heart
anxious for your future felicity: you must love her; nature, all-powerful
nature, has planted the seeds of filial affection in your bosoms.
[14.22]
Then
once more read
over the sorrows of poor Mrs. Temple, and remember, the mother whom you so
dearly love and venerate
[respect]
will feel the same,
when you, forgetful of the respect due to your maker and yourself, forsake the
paths of virtue for those of vice and folly.
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